Dan Rowinski takes a look at how Lanyrd has created a great mobile web app using HTML5. This and more in today's Daily Wrap.
Sometimes it's difficult to catch everything that hits tech media in a day, so we wrap up some of the most talked about stories. We give you a daily recap of what you missed in the ReadWriteWeb Community, including a link to some of the most popular discussions in our offsite communities on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and Google+ as well.
How Lanyrd Uses HTML5 for a Great Mobile Web App
Lanyrd's new mobile web app, released today, is a great example of how the HTML5 spec can be innovated upon. Taking advantage of offline caching, if the phone and browser support it, the app allows for a mobile conference experience that isn't at the whim of the very fallible Wi-Fi offerings at so many events. Dan says that there is great potential for an app like this, especially in regards to how they might package the app.
"It can offer this functionality to conferences as a backbone service and help organizers put together dynamic cross-platform apps with offline caching. Or it could lend its mobile Web app to conferences as a partner app. This is not just cool technology being put to use. With a little creativity, Lanyrd could build a business model around its HTML5 offering."
More Must Read Stories:
[Infographic] The Rise and Fall of Megaupload
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How to Take Better Food Porn Photos
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How Pinterest Uses Your Content Without Violating Copyright Laws
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Not So Fast: Teens Aren't Fleeing Facebook For Twitter
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Startup's Petition Raises $3M in 24 Hours if Senate Passes Crowdfunding Act
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"Anonymous" Fights the Drug Cartels and the Movie Moguls: Reaction
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The Other 99% of Entrepreneurs
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The media, when pitched a startup story, is interested in who funded the venture. They seldom ask how much revenue the company has or if it is profitable. (more)
Surprise, Surprise: Amazon Doesn't Say How Many Kindle Fires It Sold
Amazon is notorious for sharing very little information about how its products and business units perform. Its new Kindle Fire tablet is no different.
Amazon just reported its fourth quarter financial results, and, shocking no one, it doesn't disclose how many Kindle Fire tablets it sold. Or even how many total Kindles it sold. (more)
Blogger.com's New Takedown Policy Thwarts Censorship
Google's Blogger has found a way to handle local government takedown requests similar to the way Twitter now does. It will now start redirecting readers to country-specific top-level domains (TLD) instead of the usual blogspot.com domain. It does so based on the location of the user's IP address, just as many other Google services do. This gives Google the "flexibility" to comply with removal requests according to local laws. (more)
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1 comments:
Interesting one. Thanks for the share. Keep posting such kind of post on your blog.
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